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Hyperbolic partial differential equation
A hyperbolic partial differential equation is usually a second-order partial differential equation of the form
- Auxx + 2Buxy + Cuyy + Dux + Euy + F = 0
with
.
The wave equation:
is such a hyperbolic equation.
This type of second-order hyperbolic partial differential equation may be transformed to a hyperbolic system of first-order differential equations.
Hyperbolic system of partial differential equations
Consider the following system of s first order partial differential equations for s unknown functions
,
, where
are once continuously differentiable functions, nonlinear in general.
Now define for each
a matrix
, for each
.
We say that the system ( * ) is hyperbolic if for all
the matrix
has only real eigenvalues and is diagonalizable.
If the matrix A has distinct real eigenvalues, it follows it's diagonalizable. In this case the system ( * ) is called strictly hyperbolic.
Hyperbolic system and conservation laws
There is a connection between a hyperbolic system and a conservation law. Consider a hyperbolic system of one partial differential equation for one unknown function
. Then the system ( * ) has the form
Now u can be some quantity with a flux
.To show that this quantity is conserved, integrate ( * * ) over a domain Ω
If u and
are sufficiently smooth functions, we can use the divergence theorem and change the order of the integration and
and we get a conservation law for the quantity u in a common form
External links
- Linear Hyperbolic Equations at EqWorld: The World of Mathematical Equations.
- Nonlinear Hyperbolic Equations at EqWorld: The World of Mathematical Equations.
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